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Journal ArticleDOI

Time preferences and career investments

01 Aug 2015-Labour Economics (ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV)-Vol. 35, pp 77-92
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the role of time preferences in career investments and found that on-the-job search and work effort increase with patience, whereas the relation between job mobility is more ambiguous.
About: This article is published in Labour Economics.The article was published on 2015-08-01 and is currently open access. It has received 10 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Promotion (rank).

Summary (4 min read)

1. Introduction

  • Climbing up thewage ladder—like any other ladder—takes time and effort.
  • There are two distinct career paths one can follow to reach a higher position: through promotions or jobmobility.
  • Since on-the-job search andwork effort involve immediate costs and delayed rewards, they can be considered as investment activities.
  • Recent literature in economics demonstrates that time preferences predict important social and economic outcomes.
  • Other papers (e.g., Fouarge et al., 2014) assess to what extent economic preferences of recent graduates predict their occupational choice.

2.1. A career model

  • Internal and external mobility are generally examined in isolation.
  • If search and work effort are considered jointly in a theoretical model, this may lead to different predictions.
  • Drago (2006) shows that more patient workers invest more in effort, but less in onthe-job search: Drago’s model therefore predicts a negative relation between patience and job mobility, for which he finds empirical support.
  • The authors propose an alternative career model where the total level of on-the-job search intensity and work effort is endogenous and both activities are modelled as investments (i.e., generating immediate costs and delayed rewards).

2.2. The optimization problem

  • The structure of ourmodel is in the spirit of Moen and Rosen (2013), who developed a model where on-the-job search and work effort are substitutes.
  • In period 1, the worker receives wage w and makes career investments c1(s) and c2(e).
  • As the model does not rule out the possibility of a negative relation between patience and on-the-job search, there may exist a hump-shaped relation between δ and this career investment.
  • Ourmodel predicts that both work and search increase with patience (at least for sufficiently low δ).

2.3. Discussion

  • In the model presented above, the authors made several assumptions.
  • Onemay argue that there are plausible alternative assumptions, for instance, concerning the costs functions.
  • On-the-job search may in that way lead to wage growth (‘promotions’) within the current firm.
  • Moen and Rosen (2013) assume a convex cost function of search effort, but a linear cost function of work effort.
  • Drago (2006) proposes a theoretical model of search and work effort that allows for hyperbolic discounting.

3.1. Sample

  • To examine the relations between time preferences and career investments, the authors make use of the DNB Household Survey (DHS).
  • All household members aged 16 or older complete the questionnaire online.
  • As the questions about time preferences were not asked in 1993–1995, the authors exclude the first waves of the DHS.
  • During this period, the entrants could have been unemployed and in that case their answers may not reflect on-the-job search effort.
  • Due to panel attrition and refreshment, the authors make use of an unbalanced panel, consisting of almost 7000 observations (over 2000 individuals).

3.2. Time preferences

  • 6 Van Huizen and Plantenga (2014) demonstrate that the items are associated to job search behaviour of the unemployed.
  • The authors would expect that CFC01, CFC02 and CFC06–08 are positively related to patience, whereas the other six items can be expected to be negatively correlated with patience.
  • Furthermore, various statistics point out internal consistency: the average interitem covariance is equal to 0.38, the value of the Cronbach’s alpha is 0.73 and the overall KMO value is 0.77 (varying between 0.72 and 0.83).

3.3. Work effort

  • Wemeasure the effort exerted by employees on the job using two different indicators: a statement about shirking behaviour andworking overtime.
  • It may be argued that respondents who agree with this statement have a tendency to shirk at work.
  • Several empirical studies examined the investment character of working overtime hours and found a positive relationship between overtime hours and the incidence of promotion (Francesconi, 2001; Booth et al., 2003; Pannenberg, 2005).
  • Less than 5% of the workers state that they work less than their contractual working hours.

3.4. On-the-job search intensity

  • In the literature on (on-the-) job search behaviour, search intensity has beenmeasured in a variety of ways.
  • The latter may be interesting other job”; “Yes, I am considering searching for another job”; “No, I just found another job”; “No, I am not looking”.
  • The authors make use of the answer to this question to construct the job search attitude variable.

3.5. Mobility

  • Themodel presented in Section 2 leads to ambiguous predictions on the relation between time preferences on the one hand and jobmobility and promotions on the other hand.
  • These relations therefore remain an empirical question.
  • While respondents are not asked directly whether or not they moved to another job, by using data on the length of tenure and exploiting the panel structure of the data, the authors can infer whether a workers has accepted an outside job between two consecutive waves.
  • It appears that whether or not the worker uses a written statement to answer the wage questions is a major determinant of receiving a substantial wage raise at the current employer: this points out that measurement error in the wage data is a problem.
  • Estimations based on this restricted sample show generally positive relations betweenpatience and theprobability of receiving a promotion.

4.1. Work effort

  • In order to examine the relation between timepreferences andwork effort, two equations are estimated using different dependent variables: a self-assessed measure of shirking and a variable indicating whether the employee works less, equal or more than his contractual hours (‘overtime’).
  • Table 7 shows the average marginal effects of patience on the two work effort variables for estimations with and without a squared patience term .
  • This is confirmedby themarginal effects estimated at different patience levels.
  • This alternative specification (estimated with OLS) leads to the same qualitative result.
  • Overall, the findings are in line with the prediction that more patient workers invest more in work effort.

4.2. On-the-job search intensity

  • The authors estimate the relation between time preferences and search effort using different estimation methods: the equations using search attitude and a dummy indicating whether the worker applied for another job as the dependent variable are estimated by ordered probit and binary probit, respectively.
  • The main findings are presented in Table 8 .
  • In all models, the average marginal effects of patience on search intensity are positive and significant.
  • This is especially the case in the models estimating the number of applications: the marginal effects seem to be concentrated at lower patience levels.
  • Given that patient workers search more intensively for other jobs, the findings suggest that search is an investment activity.

4.3. Job mobility

  • To assess the relation between time preferences and job mobility, the authors estimated a probit model with a dummy as dependent variable, indicating whether the worker has made a job-to-job transition between the current and the consecutive wave.
  • The average marginal effect of patience and marginal effects estimated at different patience levels are negative and insignificant.
  • The theoretical model leads to ambiguous predictions on the effect of patience on jobmobility: patience has a positive job arrival effect and a negative job acceptance effect (at least for lower levels of patience).
  • Standard errors in parentheses (clustered at the individual level).

4.4. Robustness tests

  • The authors performed several tests to examine the sensitivity of the empirical results.
  • Alternatively, the authors used an aggregate patience measure using the factor scores of the first factor of all CFC items (or 8 items, excluding CFC01, CFC04 and CFC05).
  • Estimations using such alternative measures lead to similar results as presented above.
  • Second, the authors examined whether involuntary job search drives the results.
  • Again the estimations lead to the same qualitative results: patience is positively associated with work effort and search intensity, but is not significantly related to job mobility.

4.5. Measuring time preferences by behavioural proxies

  • The authors patience measure is fundamentally different from those used in several other studies.
  • 14 The DHS includes several questions indicating an individual’s risk preference, such as “I amprepared to take the risk of losingmoneywhen there is a chance that Iwill gainmoney aswell”, which is answered using a 7-point scale.
  • The most interesting results concern the estimations of job mobility: the average marginal effects as well as the marginal effects evaluated at different levels of patience are positive (Table 10).
  • A potential explanation for the discrepancy in findings is that the proxy measure may capture other unobserved factors.

5. Conclusions

  • Workers can pursue different career paths by investing in their current job and by searching on the job.
  • Given that the two activities are substitutes,the authors show that at higher 15 The Cronbach alpha is 0.225 and the interitem correlation of 0.068.
  • The theoretical model does not lead to unambiguous predictions on the association between the discount rate and job mobility.
  • Moreover, Drago (2006) predicts that patience is negatively rather than positively related to search intensity and job mobility.
  • First, relying on behavioural proxies to measure patience may generate misleading outcomes: these proxies are rather noisy measures and are likely to capture other characteristics, such as risk aversion.

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Citations
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Posted Content
TL;DR: The authors analyzes the effects of job mobility on earnings both at young and at older ages, taking into account the discontinuity of earnings across jobs, the decline of human capital investment within the job and over the life cycle, and the effect of mobility on the slope of the earnings profile.
Abstract: The paper analyzes the effects of job mobility on earnings both at young and at older ages The model takes into account the discontinuity of earnings across jobs, the decline of human capital investment within the job and over the life cycle, and the effects of mobility on the slope of the earnings profile Careful attention to the functional form of the earnings equation indicates why the coefficient of the current segment is usually larger than the coefficient of the previous segments Findings from the NLS data include: (1) Mobile individuals at all ages invest significantly less in on-the-job training (2) Although job mobility is associated with significant wage gains (across jobs), there is a substantial wage differential between the mobile and the non-mobile at older ages (3) The explanatory power of the earnings equation is significantly increased by accounting for the effects of job mobility; job mobility is an important determinant of the wage structure

79 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed an alternative indicator, average human capital (HC), to investigate city vitality, which relaxes the traditional assumption that HC has a linear relation with schooling, and combine inputs with outputs of HC by considering the heterogeneity of returns to schooling of each city.

31 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
30 Jul 2020-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: With the exception of unemployment, a consistent and often significant positive relationship between patience and the corresponding domain is documented, with the strongest associations in educational attainment, wealth and financial decisions.
Abstract: We collect data on time preferences of a representative sample of the Hungarian adult population in a non-incentivized way and investigate how patience and present bias associate with important life outcomes in five domains: i) educational attainment, ii) unemployment, iii) income and wealth, iv) financial decisions and difficulties, and v) health. Based on the literature, we formulate the broad hypotheses that patience relates positively, while present bias associates negatively with positive outcomes in the domains under study. With the exception of unemployment, we document a consistent and often significant positive relationship between patience and the corresponding domain, with the strongest associations in educational attainment, wealth and financial decisions. We find that present bias associates significantly with saving decisions and financial difficulties.

15 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relation between risk aversion and job mobility and found that risk averse workers are less likely to move to other jobs and that the negative relation between job acceptance is driven by the job acceptance rather than the search effort decision.
Abstract: Job mobility is inherently risky as workers have limited ex ante information about the quality of outside jobs. Using a large longitudinal Dutch dataset, which includes data on risk preferences elicited through an (incentivized) lottery-choice experiment, we examine the relation between risk aversion and job mobility. The evidence shows that risk averse workers are less likely to move to other jobs. The results are stronger for male workers and for workers who hold a permanent contract. Our empirical findings indicate that the negative relation between risk aversion and job mobility is driven by the job acceptance rather than the search effort decision.

15 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An agency problem with two companies competing over a menu of career incentive contracts for a manager, it is confirmed that it is unnecessary to provide career incentives under full information regardless of whether competition exists, and recommendations on mitigating the adverse impacts caused by competition and asymmetric information are provided.

8 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors survey the empirical evidence from the field on three classes of deviations from the standard model: nonstandard prefer- ences, nonstandard beliefs, and nonstandard decision making, and present evidence on overcon- fidence, on the law of small numbers and on projection bias.
Abstract: The research in Psychology and Economics (a.k.a. Behavioral Economics) suggests that individuals deviate from the standard model in three respects: (1) nonstandard prefer- ences, (2) nonstandard beliefs, and (3) nonstandard decision making. In this paper, I survey the empirical evidence from the field on these three classes of deviations. The evidence covers a number of applications, from consumption to finance, from crime to voting, from charitable giving to labor supply. In the class of nonstandard preferences, I discuss time preferences (self-control problems), risk preferences (reference depen- dence), and social preferences. On nonstandard beliefs, I present evidence on overcon- fidence, on the law of small numbers, and on projection bias. Regarding nonstandard decision making, I cover framing, limited attention, menu effects, persuasion and social pressure, and emotions. I also present evidence on how rational actors—firms, employers, CEOs, investors, and politicians—respond to the nonstandard behavior described in the survey. Finally, I briefly discuss under what conditions experience and market interactions limit the impact of the nonstandard features.

1,352 citations

Posted ContentDOI
TL;DR: This article explored the interface between personality psychology and economics and examined the predictive power of personality and the stability of personality traits over the life cycle, and developed simple analytical frameworks for interpreting the evidence in personality psychology.
Abstract: This paper explores the interface between personality psychology and economics. We examine the predictive power of personality and the stability of personality traits over the life cycle. We develop simple analytical frameworks for interpreting the evidence in personality psychology and suggest promising avenues for future research.

1,206 citations

ReportDOI
TL;DR: The authors studied the processes of job mobility and wage growth among young men and found that the evolution of wages plays a key role in this transition to stable employment: wage gains at job changes account for at least a third of early career wage growth, and the wage is the key determinant of job changing decisions among young workers.
Abstract: Using longitudinal data, we study the processes of job mobility and wage growth among young men. During the first ten years in the labor market, a typical worker will hold seven jobs, about two thirds of his career total. The evolution of wages plays a key role in this transition to stable employment: wage gains at job changes account for at least a third of early-career wage growth, and the wage is the key determinant of job changing decisions among young workers. Job changing is a critical component of workers' movement toward the stable employment relations of mature careers.

1,150 citations

ComponentDOI
TL;DR: The authors explored the interface between personality psychology and economics and examined the predictive power of personality and the stability of personality traits over the life cycle, and developed simple analytical frameworks for interpreting the evidence in personality psychology.
Abstract: This paper explores the interface between personality psychology and economics. We examine the predictive power of personality and the stability of personality traits over the life cycle. We develop simple analytical frameworks for interpreting the evidence in personality psychology and suggest promising avenues for future research.

1,036 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an equilibrium search model with on-the-job-search is presented, where firms make take-it-or-leave-it wage offers to workers conditional on their characteristics and they can respond to the outside job offers received by their employees.
Abstract: We construct and estimate an equilibrium search model with on–the–job–search. Firms make take–it–or–leave–it wage offers to workers conditional on their characteristics and they can respond to the outside job offers received by their employees. Unobserved worker productive heterogeneity is introduced in the form of cross–worker differences in a "competence" parameter. On the other side of the market, firms also are heterogeneous with respect to their marginal productivity of labor. The model delivers a theory of steady–state wage dispersion driven by heterogenous worker abilities and firm productivities, as well as by matching frictions. The structural model is estimated using matched employer and employee French panel data. The exogenous distributions of worker and firm heterogeneity components are nonparametrically estimated. We use this structural estimation to provide a decomposition of cross–employee wage variance. We find that the share of the cross–sectional wage variance that is explained by person effects varies across skill groups. Specifically, this share lies close to 40% for high–skilled white collars, and quickly decreases to 0% as the observed skill level decreases. The contribution of market imperfections to wage dispersion is typically around 50%.

523 citations

Frequently Asked Questions (9)
Q1. What contributions have the authors mentioned in the paper "Time preferences and career investments" ?

In this paper, the authors examined how time preferences are related to career investments and thereby shape the individual 's career path. 

A potential explanation for this inconsistency is that the authors use a different patience measure: whereas previous studies rely on behavioural proxies ( e. g., smoking and alcohol consumption ), they exploit a battery of items indicating the individual ’ s orientation towards the future. The authors test this explanation by re-estimating their models using a patience measure based on behavioural proxies. Future research could exploit more general ( self-assessed ) psychological constructs such as the CFC scale. The results complement recent findings in economics showing that time preferences predict the individual ’ s income level ( Golsteyn et al., 2014 ; Cadena and Keys, forthcoming ), suggesting observed income inequality can to some extent be explained by heterogeneity in the discount rate. 

Answering advertisements, directly contacting employers and asking friends and relatives are frequentlyused job search methods as well. 

A higher level of search effort results in a positive effect on the job arrival rate,whereas an increase in the level of work effort generates a negative effect on thejob acceptance rate (1 − F(ŵ)). 

Cadena and Keys (forthcoming) also demonstrate that impatience is negatively related to school performance and thereby depresses lifetime income: the earnings gap between ‘impatient’ and ‘patient’ individuals is over $75.000 by the time they reach middle age. 

The rationale is that workers who just (re)entered the labour market may have rather distinctive job search behaviour, as they may for instance accept a job that they perceive as temporary. 

Although promotions and job mobility are typically studied in isolation, recent literature stresses that on-the-job search may play an important role in the wage formation of workers staying in the firm (e.g., Cahuc et al., 2006; Postel-Vinay and Turon, 2010; Moen and Rosen, 2013). 

Themodel shows that patience increases work and search effort (at least within a certain range of the discount rate), but that the relation with mobility is ambiguous. 

The authors estimate the relation between time preferences and search effort using different estimation methods: the equations using search attitude and a dummy indicating whether the worker applied for another job as the dependent variable are estimated by ordered probit and binary probit, respectively. 

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